Rome - Italian Reform Minister Umberto Bossi's giving the
finger to Italy's national anthem led to an outcry earlier this week,
but on Friday it was his supporters who were outraged by Ryanair's
running of an advertisement showing the minister making the gesture.
'It is offensive and in bad taste,' said Italian parliamentarian,
Massimo Polledri, a member of the Bossi-led Northern League party.
Polledri was referring to a photograph of Bossi, middle-finger
raised in the insulting gesture, posted under the phrase 'Minister
Bossi to Italian passengers,' on the Italian website of budget
airline, Ryanair.
The photograph accompanies an advertisement in which Ryanair
offers flights for 10 euros (15 dollars) while slamming the
government's supporting for Italy's state-controlled airline,
Alitalia.
'The (Italian) government supports the high fares of Alitalia, the
frequent strikes at Alitalia and can't care less about the Italian
passengers,' the ad says.
'It would be better for Ryanair to wipe all this, and in
particular its connecting of such false statements with the image of
our leader,' said Mario Borghezio, a European Parliament member for
the Northern League.
'We are ready to launch a boycott against the company (Ryanair),'
Borghezio was quoted as saying, by the ANSA news agency.
The photograph of Bossi, whose party wants devolution of powers to
Italy's regions, was taken last Sunday at a political conference in
which he hit out at a line in the national anthem which appears to
say Italy is the slave to Rome.
'Never again slaves to Rome,' the minister said, raising his
middle finger.
The gesture triggered condemnation from opposition politicians,
some of whom asked Bossi to resign, but also embarrassment from other
members of the conservative coalition that makes up Prime Minister
Silvio Berlusconi's government.
Berlusconi said later he had met with Bossi to discuss the matter
and that it had been 'resolved.'
Like Berlusconi, Bossi strongly opposed a plan earlier this year
by the previous centre-left government to sell the financially-
troubled Alitalia to French-Dutch airline Air France-KLM. Air France-
KLM subsequently withdrew its bid.
Ryanair and other airlines allege that the Italian state's support
for Alitalia amounts to unfair competition in contravention of
European Union laws.
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